Rahiri Jamie-Lee, Barazanchi Ahmed, Gillon Ashlea, MacCormick Andrew, Harwood Matire, Hill Andrew
Department of Surgery, South Auckland Clinical Campus, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Te Kupenga Hauora Māori, Tāmaki Campus, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
ANZ J Surg. 2019 Jun;89(6):689-694. doi: 10.1111/ans.15059. Epub 2019 Mar 7.
Bariatric surgery has become topical in the media worldwide, influencing wider societal attitudes towards obesity and obesity management. This study aims to explore the media portrayal of bariatric surgery in all print news articles published in New Zealand (NZ) over a decade.
An electronic search of two databases (Proquest Australia/NZ Newsstream and Newztext) and two NZ news media websites (Stuff and the NZ Herald) was performed to retrieve print news articles reporting stories, opinion pieces or editorials regarding bariatric surgery published between January 2007 to June 2017. Qualitative thematic analysis was performed on all included articles.
From January 2007 to December 2017, 252 articles related to bariatric surgery were published. Seven major themes emerged centred around barriers to accessing bariatric surgery, deficit attitudes towards obesity and social justice. These views were driven by articles that debated the limited number of publicly funded bariatric procedures offered in NZ. In addition, healthcare professionals used the media as a platform to challenge discriminatory attitudes towards obesity and bariatric surgery.
The NZ media is a powerful tool that still bolsters binary perspectives of obesity and bariatric surgery which may work against addressing the obesity epidemic.
减肥手术已成为全球媒体关注的热点,影响着社会对肥胖及肥胖管理的广泛态度。本研究旨在探讨过去十年间新西兰(NZ)所有印刷新闻文章中对减肥手术的媒体报道情况。
通过对两个数据库(Proquest澳大利亚/新西兰新闻流和Newztext)以及两个新西兰新闻媒体网站(Stuff和新西兰先驱报)进行电子搜索,以检索2007年1月至2017年6月期间发表的有关减肥手术的报道、评论文章或社论等印刷新闻文章。对所有纳入的文章进行定性主题分析。
2007年1月至2017年12月期间,共发表了252篇与减肥手术相关的文章。出现了七个主要主题,围绕着获得减肥手术的障碍、对肥胖的缺陷态度和社会正义。这些观点受到了关于新西兰公共资助的减肥手术数量有限的辩论文章的推动。此外,医疗保健专业人员利用媒体作为平台,挑战对肥胖和减肥手术的歧视性态度。
新西兰媒体是一个强大的工具,但仍支持对肥胖和减肥手术的二元观点,这可能不利于应对肥胖流行问题。